In recent years, Agatha Christie TV adaptations have gone all dark and edgy ...
John D. MacDonald was born in Sharon, Pennsylvania, in 1916, and later moved with his family to Utica, New York, where he was ...
An austere civil servant becomes enmeshed in a missing people case in Andrew Hughes’s Emma, Disappeared (Hachette Ireland, £14.99), which features one of Irish crime fiction’s most audacious ...
Our columnist on the year’s most outstanding crime novels. Credit...Karan Singh Supported by By Sarah Weinman I’ve long believed that crime fiction runs along a spectrum between order and ...
In their mutual love of books, where do they agree and where disagree? “I think we both have a love of crime fiction,” says McDermid. “I think we also both read pretty widely. I’ve pretty ...
Rarely Seen Story by Crime Fiction Master John D MacDonald Offers Clues to His Best Known Work NEW YORK (AP) — Crime writer John D. MacDonald, a master of the genre, was so prolific that ...
The Way brothers discuss their latest stranger-than-fiction docuseries 'The Kings of Tupelo: A Southern Crime Saga.' ...
NEW YORK -- Crime writer John D. MacDonald, a master of the genre, was so prolific that sometimes even he couldn't keep up with what he was doing. He might have dozens of stories in submission at ...
Coles’ Murder Under the Mistletoe (Weidenfeld & Nicolson) is the highest-selling individual crime title – and since the beginning of December has been the highest-selling festive fiction title ...
The second edition of the three-day Crime Literature Festival brought together writers of true and fictional crime stories from all over the country, along with celebrated cops The Tribune ...
You never know what type of book might be just your thing,’ says the iconic mystery novelist, whose new Rebus mystery is ...